Federal Trade Adjustment Assistance covers 5,319 Ohioans so far in 2007

As Congress gets ready to debate reauthorization of the federal Trade Adjustment Assistance (TAA) Program, a Policy Matters Ohio report finds that the U.S. Department of Labor certified that 5,319 Ohio manufacturing workers at 47 different workplaces lost their jobs due to international trade in the first seven months of 2007. This August 2007 update to our previous January report, International Trade and Job Loss in Ohio 2007, finds that international trade continues to be responsible for a significant number of job losses in the Ohio manufacturing sector. Using administrative data from the TAA program, the report pinpoints where certain trade-related job losses have occurred in Ohio. Twenty-five Ohio counties had TAA-covered job losses in the first seven months of the year. Nearly half of the workers lost their jobs due to shifts of production abroad. Although the TAA program does not cover all layoffs, it establishes a minimum estimate of job loss due to import competition and moving production overseas.

Current trade policies are hurting Ohio’s workers and their families. Congress should take this opportunity to improve the program and provide better protection for our workers and communities.

Press Release 

Read Our January 2007 Report

 

 

Foreclosures in Cuyahoga County Communities, 2007

Foreclosures have become a major problem in Cuyahoga County, across Ohio and the nation. Policy Matters Ohio previously reported that the county has led the state in foreclosure filings per person. This August 2007 report documents the number of filings in the county by municipality in the first half of 2007. Filings remain concentrated in the City of Cleveland. However, they are growing across the county; filings increased from the same period a year earlier in 38 of the county’s 59 political subdivisions. Maple Heights and East Cleveland rank highest among municipalities in foreclosure filings per person, followed by Cleveland. Inner-ring suburbs together account for 35 percent of the filings in the county. Filings are growing as fast in the outer suburbs as in the inner ring. While this study does not contain a comprehensive list of all foreclosure filings in the county, it covers the vast bulk of filings and those for which geographic information is readily available.

Report

Appendices

Policy Matters Calls for ‘Entrepreneurial’ Energy, Union Jobs

The Hannah Report

With Democrats and Republicans offering competing energy platforms this week and Ohio legislators seeing representation at a related policy summit in Nashville, Policy Matters Ohio announced the release of a national report recognizing energy initiatives in Ohio and other states.

The think tank is the Ohio partner of Apollo Alliance, a proponent of energy independence and job creation which this week published “New
Energy for Cities.” Funded by the Gund Foundation, the study focused on progressive energy policies achieved through local cooperation, singling out a number of communities around the state.

The report first laid out its four-part plan for marrying clean energy and economic development:

Invest in Renewable Power
“Generate 25 percent of electricity from clean, renewable sources, through policies and programs that prioritize local production, workforce development, and good jobs.

Create High-Performance Buildings
“Revitalize the built environment by renovating public and private buildings, lowering energy consumption, moving toward renewable energy, and creating good jobs and job training for local residents.

Drive Toward Energy Independence
“Reduce oil consumption 25 percent by 2025 by promoting efficient technologies and clean, renewable fuel alternatives through policies and programs that prioritize local production and good jobs.

Build High-Performance Cities
“Promote low-energy, high-performance cities and communities connected by regional transportation networks, through policies and programs that prioritize local hiring and good jobs.”

Specifically, Apollo Alliance defined its priority as “good-paying union jobs.”

Ohio cities recognized in the report for “entrepreneurial” energy include Bowling Green, Cincinnati, Cleveland, and Canton. The Lucas County community led a coalition of ten municipal utilities in a bond package to
finance the state’s first commercial-grade wind farm, generating enough energy for roughly 6,000 people. The Bowling Green Utility Department also set aside a “green power” pricing program that earmarked money for solar energy development.

Cincinnati has targeted clean transportation from two directions, converting city buses to a 50-percent biodiesel blend.

“This increase will make the Cincinnati Metro one of the largest biodiesel users in the nation,” said the report, “consuming about 1.3 million gallons a year.”

The renewable fuel is manufactured locally from Ohio soybeans, and the city saves about $1 for every gallon of biodiesel purchased through an arrangement with its local supplier. Cincinnati and Hamilton County are also collaborating on a pilot project to reduce costs further by collecting waste vegetable oil from businesses and converting it to biodiesel for city and county vehicles.

“It’s an honor for Cincinnati to be recognized for our use of biodiesel in Metro buses,” said Mayor Mark Mallory. “We are saving money and we are supporting area business by buying the biodiesel locally. I’m also proud of our involvement in the U.S. Mayors Climate Protection Agreement …

“We’re working on solutions that will protect our environment, create good jobs, and reduce our country’s dependence on foreign energy.”

On a macro scale, the Cleveland Regional Transit Authority has constructed “exclusive bus lanes” connecting downtown to the residential east side.

“The 5.2 mile line runs through a formerly grand Cleveland neighborhood that has slipped into decline,” noted the study. “Planners anticipate the bus system acting as an economic catalyst for this area.”

The Northeast Ohio Public Energy Council (NOPEC), which has seen some modification in the signing of HB85 (Blessing), also selected “clean energy leader” Green Mountain Energy to service 400,000 customers in eight counties as part of “community choice aggregation.” The contract calls for two percent of the area’s energy supply to come from qualified renewable resources, and the other 98 percent from natural gas or “a fuel with an equal or lesser emissions profile.”

Canton is the site of one of the state’s more ambitious programs, in which the Stark Metropolitan Housing Authority upgraded a 30-year-old apartment building with a geothermal heat pump that has reduced carbon dioxide emissions by 40,000 tons and saved taxpayers $29,000 annually.

“So cities can be models for saving energy,” concluded Apollo Alliance. “But just as important, cities can be models for creating good jobs producing energy, constructing high-performance buildings, and manufacturing clean-energy technologies. The manufacturing, construction, installation, and maintenance of renewable energy and energy efficiency systems will happen almost entirely in metropolitan areas. The physical infrastructure America needs to build these new technologies — factories, universities, and research parks — is in or near cities.”

JobWatch August 2007

A flat Ohio job market

Though it has seen some ups and downs from month to month, Ohio employment is nearly the same as it was six months and a year ago,  according to seasonally adjusted payroll numbers for nonfarm wage and salary jobs released August 17 by the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services (ODJFS).

Full Report